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« Monday May 05, 2008 »
Mon
Start: 04/06/2008 12:31 am
End: 05/05/2008 12:00 am

ongoing over a year or more

none

none as of yet

FREE--donations accepted

Zeratha Young

open

mooglicious@gmail.com

No

My name is Zeratha Young and I am a graduate student through Goddard College’s ‘Socially Responsible Business and Sustainable Communities’ program. My area of focus is whole systems design and participatory sustainable development. Currently I am working on a thesis project which will result in a participatory public ecological art restoration installation’. The installation itself will serve as a visual, interactive, educational, restoration focused whole systems map of the Portland area bioregion including components of social, natural and economic systems and capital. It is titled: Art as a Transformative Environmental Education Process: A Participatory Community and Systems Based Approach to Place Based Ecological Art Installations and Restorations.”


Brett Lyon
brett@solv.org
503-844-9571 x 332
http://www.solv.org/programs/down_by_the_riverside.asp

Join SOLV and roughly 12,000 volunteers across Oregon to fight back against invasive species. On Saturday, May 17th from 9 am to 1 pm SOLV is hosting Down By The Riverside, an event with over 300 projects throughout Oregon and Clark County, WA. At this fun volunteer event community members learn about their personal impact on local watersheds, important work is accomplished, and people build stronger bonds with one another. This year, SOLV is partnering with The Nature Conservancy, Oregon Public Broadcasting, The Oregon Invasive Species Council, and other organizations to focus on the problem of invasive species. Invasive plants cost Oregon over $100 million each year due to habitat and crop loss and contribute to the decline of many threatened and endangered native species.

FREE

outdoor

Depends on project
Start: 05/05/2008 1:30 pm
End: 05/05/2008 4:30 pm

For more information or to register: 503-636-4112 x102 or register@berrybot.org

The Camassia Natural Area, only 26 acres, supports an extraordinary diversity of habitats: oak--madrone woodlands, ponds, and stunning wet-meadows. On this hike, with geologist Dick Thoms, learn where the dark gray basalt bedrock came from and how it became exposed. Be prepared for muddy trails on this easy hike.

$10 Space is limited. Registration required.

Outdoors

Be prepared for muddy trails on this easy hike.